E. Jean Carroll defamation case: Judge denies Trump's motion for mistrial

A jury ordered Donald Trump to pay Carroll $83 million for defaming her.

Former President Donald Trump, at the end of a five-day trial, has been ordered to pay $83.3 million in damages to former Elle magazine columnist E. Jean Carroll for defaming her in 2019 when he denied her allegations of sexual abuse.

Last year, in a separate trial, a jury determined that Trump was liable for sexually abusing Carroll in the dressing room of a Manhattan department store in the 1990s, and that he defamed her in a 2022 social media post by calling her allegations "a Hoax and a lie" and saying "This woman is not my type!"

Trump has denied all wrongdoing and has said he doesn't know who Carroll is.


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Trial is 'straight out of banana republic,' says Trump attorney

Donald Trump's legal counsel Boris Epshteyn briefly spoke to reporters outside court at the conclusion of Tuesday's proceedings, calling the trial "straight out of [a] banana republic."

"Manhattan is 90-95% Democrat," Epshteyn said, despite voter registration records showing the borough is about 70% Democratic. "Does anybody think the President will get a fair trial here? Absolutely not," he said.

Despite a jury last year finding Trump liable for sexually abusing Carroll, Epshteyn alleged that Carroll is making "false accusations."

"President Trump has consistently stated that he did not commit the allegation and did not commit the acts that the plaintiff alleges. He has been steadfast in that. And it is right to defend himself from false accusations," Epshteyn said.

Epshteyn declined to comment on whether Trump plans to attend court tomorrow.

Carroll did not speak to reporters when she left court.


Carroll seeking a 'windfall' over 'mean Tweets,' Trump attorney says

E. Jean Carroll is looking for a "windfall" over a series of "mean Tweets from Twitter trolls," Trump attorney Alina Habba said during the defense's opening statement, in which Habba sought to cast doubt on the severity of the alleged harm Carroll said she endured.

Habba told the jury they do not have to believe Carroll's account of how she has suffered as a result of Trump's defamatory statements.

"Her career has prospered and she has been thrust back into the limelight like she has always wanted," Habba said, accusing Carroll of using her story "to obtain as much fame and notoriety as possible."

The defense framed Carroll's lawsuit as nothing more than an attempt to shake down Trump for money over scores of critical Tweets that have nothing to do with the defamatory statements by Trump that are at issue in the trial.

"She expects you as the jury to give her an award for every negative comment that was thrown her way," Habba said. "She is looking for you to give her a windfall because some people on social media said mean things about her."

Habba showed a photo of Carroll in the company of Trump critic Kathy Griffin and said Carroll is close with another critic of the former president, his niece Mary Trump.

"This is someone who craves fame and seeks fame wherever she can get it," Habba said. "She got what she wanted."

The proceedings were dismissed for the day after both sides concluded their opening statements. The trial will resume Wednesday with the first witness in the case.


Trump 'unleashed his followers,' Carroll's attorney says

Donald Trump's lies about E. Jean Carroll "unleashed his followers to go after her," and as Trump campaigns for president he "continues to lie about Ms. Carroll," Carroll's attorney said in her opening statement.

"How much money will it take to make him stop?" Carroll's attorney, Shawn Crowley, said. "He kept up those very same lies even after a federal jury sat in this courtroom and unanimously found that he sexually assaulted her and defamed her."

Crowley reminded the jury that Trump "was president when he made those statements and he used the world's biggest microphone to humiliate her" -- the result of which was that he "wrecked" Carroll's reputation in a matter of days, Crowley said.

"Donald Trump's response was swift and brutal," Crowley said. "Donald Trump did not just deny the assault. He went much, much further."

She quoted Trump's statements from June 22, 2019: "'People should pay dearly for making up accusations" about him.

Crowley also quoted Trump saying "she's not my type" on that day in 2019. "In other words, she was too ugly to assault. She must have been lying because she was too unattractive for Mr. Trump to sexually assault," Crowley said.

Carroll, who is now 80, sat at the plaintiff's table as her attorney showed the jury messages Trump's followers posted calling her ugly and urging her to kill herself.

"When Donald Trump called Ms. Carroll a fraud and a liar, they listened and they believed and they decided to go after her," Crowley said. "Donald Trump knew exactly what he was unleashing."


'This is not a do-over,' judge instructs jury

Judge Lewis Kaplan told the nine jurors that they must accept as true that Trump forcibly sexually assaulted E. Jean Carroll and defamed her when he denied it.

"Ms. Carroll did not make up her claim of forcible sexual abuse," Judge Kaplan told the panel. "His false statements tended to disparage Ms. Carroll or tended to expose her to hatred or to induce an unsavory opinion of her."

The judge made it clear the jury was only determining damages related to two defamatory statements Trump made in June 2019 when he denied Carroll's rape allegation. He said the trial was not an opportunity to re-litigate the prior trial, in which a jury found Trump liable for defamation and sexual assault.

"This trial is not a do-over of the previous trial which determined those facts," Kaplan said.


Defense says Carroll provided no 'evidence of reputational harm'

Defense attorney Alina Habba, delivering her closing argument, showed the jury a series of caustic tweets to make the case that E. Jean Carroll failed to prove she suffered the kind of reputational harm she said Donald Trump caused.

"As you can see, the total number of views of all these tweets that they feel best represents their case is a total of 143 views," Habba said. "That's not evidence of reputational harm."

Habba accused Carroll of enjoying the attention her accusation has created. "Ms. Carroll loves her new reputation and her life. My client is not enjoying this," she said.

"Let's not forget Ms. Carroll is making more money now than she was in June 2019," Habba said.

Habba said that in 2019, Carroll had hit "financial and social rock bottom" and decided to climb her way back to a lavish lifestyle with celebrity friends by making a public accusation against Trump.

"She made an allegation in the most public form by design," Habba said, adding that Trump had repeatedly made his position clear.

That drew an objection from the plaintiffs that was sustained by the judge, since Trump is not allowed to cause the jury to doubt an earlier verdict that held Trump liable for sexual assaulting and defaming Carroll.

"It is established," Judge Kaplan said.

"It is established by a jury," Habba added.

"It is established, and you will not quarrel with me," the judge said.

When Habba resumed, she mocked the reputational repair expert who testified that rehabilitating Carroll would cost as much as $12 million -- particularly the idea that conservative commentators Joe Rogan and Candace Owens should be paid to help Ms. Carroll repair her reputation.

"What planet are we living on?" Habba said.

The plaintiff's rebuttal will follow the defense's closing.